Echoes of war haunt Nicaragua
1980s nostalgia fans should enjoy the political battle which is heating up in Nicaragua, even if the sides are more confused this time around. Hopefully, the situation will not come to armed conflict this time, but echoes of the war that rocked the country 20 years ago are being raised.
Former Managua mayor Herty Lewites, recently expelled from the leftist Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN), heads the list of hopefuls for next year's presidential race at 25%, according to a poll by CID-Gallup. Coming in a close second is current presidency secretary Eduardo Montealegre, who recently broke from the rightist Constitutionalist Liberal Party (PLC). He is followed by former president Daniel Ortega of the FSLN. Also running is former president Arnoldo Alemán, of the PLC. Lewites was expelled from the FSLN in February. In March, the FSLN officially designated Ortega its presidential nominee. Ortega governed from 1985 to 1990, but was a losing candidate in the 1990, 1996 and 2001 elections. In June, Lewites and Montealegre announced the formation of a unified front during an assembly of the Conservative Party (PC). (Angus Reid Global Scan, Aug. 22)
Lewites heads the Rescue Sandinismo party, a breakaway faction of the FSLN that opposes what it calls Ortega's authoritarianism. Ortega and his erstwhile arch-enemy Alemán have meanwhile formed an alliance to push through a package of constitutional reforms to weaken the presidency—a move aimed at the sitting president Enrique Bolanos, who heads the breakaway faction of the PLC, Alliance for the Republic Party (APRE), following a falling-out with Alemán. So breakaway factions of both the leftist FSLN and rightist PLC are in alliance to oppose the original parties—which, in turn, are in alliance to oppose the breakaway parties. Just to make it more ironic, the breakaway factions—including Rescue Sandinismo—are also in alliance with the Conservative Party, which is to the right of the rightist PLC. A rather embarassingly post-ideological mess, given that this little country was one of the last frontlines of the Cold War. (See our last report on Central America.)
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One critic of the agreement
is Nicaraguan leftist historian Aldo Díaz Lacayo, who accused Washington of "brazenly interfering" in Nicaragua to unite the right wing and dispute a possible FSLN victory in 2006 elections. In the history of our country, "the imperial boot has put and removed presidents; it has distorted reality to protect a servile oligarchy," he told Cuba's Prensa Latina. He said people has always risen up "to fight the Yankees" and added that "we are not docile servants of their hegemonistic policy."
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http://www.ww4report.com/node/962
Note: This is a blog post... however, it was listed in Google News and it describes very recent events in Nicaragua. It also gives a fairly good background of what has happened recently in Nicaraguan politics.
Elections will be held next year and polls are really interesting right now... Lewites has over a 70% approval rating, while Ortega has over 70% disapproval. Same thing in the right wing, with Montealeagre with more than 60% positive, and Aleman over 70% negative.